Centennial college is Toronto's No. 1 community college. It offers lots of full time and part time programs including diploma, degree programs & also offers co-operative programs. Students of Co-operative programs can gain practical field experience with their college studies.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Centennial College is constantly breaking new ground through its offerings, fully equipped campuses, international relationships that see students travel abroad to study and more. The school’s Bachelor of Applied Information Sciences - Bridging to Software Systems Design is also an example of the school’s innovative thinking. That’s because it is the fast-track version of the Software Systems Design undertaking, which was created after Centennial College was chosen by the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities to deliver a program to address the demand for highly specialized software designers.

With the bridging option, students begin attending software design courses in the fifth semester of the four-year program and must complete three bridging courses: two in mathematics and one in computer architecture during regular semesters.

This option is open to computer program/analyst graduates or software engineering graduates from Centennial or from a similar program. These grads graduate from the four-year Bachelor of Applied Information Sciences in Software System Design in two years by completing courses that include:

Software Standards, Testing and Maintenance: Requirements gathering begins software development practices and acceptance testing ends it. Students learn these practices as well as requirements management, testing and maintenance, along with the practical experience in preparing software documents using standard templates. Students gain experience in these areas through hands-on learning.

Database Programming: Storage is an important aspect of software systems as storage cost and an increase in data acquisition, databases has increased. This course tackles topics like distributed database architecture, queries, transaction management and concurrency controls.

Computer and Human Interaction: Students learn about the establishment of the relationship between generally accepted truths (MAXIMs) on one end to supporting research and on the other end to pedagogy of Human-Computer Interaction. Among specific topics are: human behavior, basics of interaction paradigm, framework and styles; interaction design principles; design models; usability principles and testing; state of the art facets of Interaction beyond GUI with particular focus on human perceptual system such as speech, hearing, touch and movement.

Cryptography and Information Security: Cryptography is the science of encryption, which has important applications in information security. The course begins with an overview of cryptography and its role in information security. Historical techniques of cryptography are then studied before the course delves into modern symmetric encryption techniques such as DES and AES. Lastly, it covers required mathematical preliminaries including number theory before presenting public-key techniques such as the RSA algorithm, the ElGamal Cryptosystem and Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange.

To supplements these courses, students complete a number of software development projects that offer real-world experience by integrating problem-solving techniques, project planning, testing, reporting and presentation.

This software design program has been, since 2010, a fully Canadian Information Processing Society (CIPS) ISTAC accredited program. Graduates from the program are eligible to apply for certified membership to CIPS.